As I have hinted heavily, I interviewed Larry Lessig recently; you can find the result in today's Guardian or here.
What this doesn't convey is the four-hour journey it required to meet him, including several trains and a 30-minute taxi ride that took 15 minutes at the hands of sexagenarian who fancied himself as a rally driver (and who insisted on using his mobile while driving, just to add to the challenge). This was to reach Hay-on-Wye, where Lessig was giving a talk as part of the festival there.
The result also fails to convey anything of the experience of listening to that lecture, whose style was in striking contrast to the one-to-one interview (conducted partly in the back of a car) itself. Where Lessig is quiet almost to the point of timidity in private, in public he soars.
His oratory - for it is nothing less - is built from two elements: a powerful rhythmic sense that drives forward inexorably the logic of his lecture, and a strangely-effective sing-song voice that shifts between a set of frequencies according to the points he is emphasising. Impressive.
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